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Young Singaporeans do not know what is like to be poor

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  • pilotsnoopy
    replied
    Originally posted by seiko.citizen View Post
    butter my bread, wipe my ass, and pack my school bags. makes you wonder, what is really is like to be one of the few privileged people.

    hell, my car mati, i still have to crawl under the car and fix it myself.
    ironic thing is, we can't be bitter about it and risk alienating them/ourselves...

    too 'precious' huh?

    i realise privileged people need not necessarily be rich, even the poor can unrealistically spoil their kids.

    Leave a comment:


  • seiko.citizen
    replied
    Originally posted by pilotsnoopy View Post
    no need to pick up ball, within their walls now sg kids also got maids to pick up everything else.
    butter my bread, wipe my ass, and pack my school bags. makes you wonder, what is really is like to be one of the few privileged people.

    hell, my car mati, i still have to crawl under the car and fix it myself.

    Leave a comment:


  • pilotsnoopy
    replied
    Originally posted by exxondus View Post
    Qn: Why they hire a butler in the first place?
    leftover from colonial days...must maintain tradition

    Leave a comment:


  • exxondus
    replied
    wah serious ah. icic....now I know where my tax money goes to

    Leave a comment:


  • exxondus
    replied
    Qn: Why they hire a butler in the first place?

    Leave a comment:


  • pilotsnoopy
    replied
    no need to pick up ball, within their walls now sg kids also got maids to pick up everything else.

    Leave a comment:


  • Young Singaporeans do not know what is like to be poor

    Guess i'm the odd one out..




    Source: Channel news asia

    SINGAPORE: Singapore is where it is today because of the effort that was put into building the country, said Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew.

    Mr Lee made this point at a recently concluded dialogue with tertiary students at the National University of Singapore.

    He said without people with ruggedness and a do or die attitude, there will not be the Singapore that exists today.

    Mr Lee noted that unlike the older generation, most young Singaporeans do not know what it is like to be poor.

    But he said young Singaporeans can emotionally and intellectually understand that if one does not make the same effort, Singapore will regress.

    To illustrate the value of hard work, Mr Lee gave a personal insight into how he raised his children to become self-reliant and why the family decided not to live at the official residence at the Istana.

    Mr Lee said: "As Prime Minister, I was given a house at Sri Temasek. So I took them (our children) there one day to play and Sri Temasek was on high ground. They were playing with a ball, the ball rolled down, and the butler ran about 50 to 60 yards to pick up the ball and bring it back.

    "My wife and I watched and said if we stay here for five years, our children will grow up believing that life is like that - that somebody will always be there to be pick up balls for them, (so) we stayed at home."

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